Literature DB >> 27664076

Thermocline deepening boosts ecosystem metabolism: evidence from a large-scale lake enclosure experiment simulating a summer storm.

Darren P Giling1, Jens C Nejstgaard1, Stella A Berger1, Hans-Peter Grossart1,2, Georgiy Kirillin3, Armin Penske1, Maren Lentz1, Peter Casper1, Jörg Sareyka1, Mark O Gessner1,4.   

Abstract

Extreme weather events can pervasively influence ecosystems. Observations in lakes indicate that severe storms in particular can have pronounced ecosystem-scale consequences, but the underlying mechanisms have not been rigorously assessed in experiments. One major effect of storms on lakes is the redistribution of mineral resources and plankton communities as a result of abrupt thermocline deepening. We aimed at elucidating the importance of this effect by mimicking in replicated large enclosures (each 9 m in diameter, ca. 20 m deep, ca. 1300 m3 in volume) a mixing event caused by a severe natural storm that was previously observed in a deep clear-water lake. Metabolic rates were derived from diel changes in vertical profiles of dissolved oxygen concentrations using a Bayesian modelling approach, based on high-frequency measurements. Experimental thermocline deepening stimulated daily gross primary production (GPP) in surface waters by an average of 63% for >4 weeks even though thermal stratification re-established within 5 days. Ecosystem respiration (ER) was tightly coupled to GPP, exceeding that in control enclosures by 53% over the same period. As GPP responded more strongly than ER, net ecosystem productivity (NEP) of the entire water column was also increased. These protracted increases in ecosystem metabolism and autotrophy were driven by a proliferation of inedible filamentous cyanobacteria released from light and nutrient limitation after they were entrained from below the thermocline into the surface water. Thus, thermocline deepening by a single severe storm can induce prolonged responses of lake ecosystem metabolism independent of other storm-induced effects, such as inputs of terrestrial materials by increased catchment run-off. This highlights that future shifts in frequency, severity or timing of storms are an important component of climate change, whose impacts on lake thermal structure will superimpose upon climate trends to influence algal dynamics and organic matter cycling in clear-water lakes.
© 2016 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  climate variability; ecosystem productivity; extreme events; gross primary production; mesocosm; respiration; stratified lakes

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27664076     DOI: 10.1111/gcb.13512

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Glob Chang Biol        ISSN: 1354-1013            Impact factor:   10.863


  5 in total

1.  Impacts of a record-breaking storm on physical and biogeochemical regimes along a catchment-to-coast continuum.

Authors:  Seán Kelly; Brian Doyle; Elvira de Eyto; Mary Dillane; Phil McGinnity; Russell Poole; Martin White; Eleanor Jennings
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2020-07-28       Impact factor: 3.240

2.  Storm impacts on phytoplankton community dynamics in lakes.

Authors:  Jason D Stockwell; Jonathan P Doubek; Rita Adrian; Orlane Anneville; Cayelan C Carey; Laurence Carvalho; Lisette N De Senerpont Domis; Gaël Dur; Marieke A Frassl; Hans-Peter Grossart; Bas W Ibelings; Marc J Lajeunesse; Aleksandra M Lewandowska; María E Llames; Shin-Ichiro S Matsuzaki; Emily R Nodine; Peeter Nõges; Vijay P Patil; Francesco Pomati; Karsten Rinke; Lars G Rudstam; James A Rusak; Nico Salmaso; Christian T Seltmann; Dietmar Straile; Stephen J Thackeray; Wim Thiery; Pablo Urrutia-Cordero; Patrick Venail; Piet Verburg; R Iestyn Woolway; Tamar Zohary; Mikkel R Andersen; Ruchi Bhattacharya; Josef Hejzlar; Nasime Janatian; Alfred T N K Kpodonu; Tanner J Williamson; Harriet L Wilson
Journal:  Glob Chang Biol       Date:  2020-03-05       Impact factor: 10.863

3.  Climatic, physical, and biogeochemical changes drive rapid oxygen loss and recovery in a marine ecosystem.

Authors:  Jesse Wilson; Gerda Ucharm; J Michael Beman
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2019-11-06       Impact factor: 4.379

4.  Toxins and Other Bioactive Metabolites in Deep Chlorophyll Layers Containing the Cyanobacteria Planktothrix cf. isothrix in Two Georgian Bay Embayments, Lake Huron.

Authors:  Arthur Zastepa; Todd R Miller; L Cynthia Watson; Hedy Kling; Susan B Watson
Journal:  Toxins (Basel)       Date:  2021-06-27       Impact factor: 4.546

5.  Design and implementation of an illumination system to mimic skyglow at ecosystem level in a large-scale lake enclosure facility.

Authors:  Andreas Jechow; Günther Schreck; Christopher C M Kyba; Stella A Berger; Lukas Thuile Bistarelli; Matthias Bodenlos; Mark O Gessner; Hans-Peter Grossart; Franziska Kupprat; Jens C Nejstgaard; Andreas Pansch; Armin Penske; Michael Sachtleben; Tom Shatwell; Gabriel A Singer; Susanne Stephan; Tim J W Walles; Sabine Wollrab; Karolina M Zielinska-Dabkowska; Franz Hölker
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-12-06       Impact factor: 4.379

  5 in total

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